Davud Agha was probably recruited through the devshirme system circa 1562 and from there followed a typical path into the Ottoman bureaucracy, studying architecture under the master architect Sinan.[3] He probably participated as a military engineer in the Ottoman campaign against the Safavids in 1583.[3] He was a protegé of the Chief Black Eunuch, Mehmed Agha or Mehmet bin Abdurrahman. Under the latter's supervision, he may have been responsible for a late expansion of the Atik Valide Mosque in Üsküdar (previously designed by Sinan) between 1584 and 1586.[4][5] The earliest work clearly attributed to him was in the Topkapı Palace in 1585,[6] where he constructed the sultan's bath and most likely the adjacent Imperial Hall (Hünkâr Sofası).[7] Other early works attributed to him, while Sinan was still the chief architect, are the mosque of Kızlarağa Mehmet at Çarşamba (circa 1585)[8] and the Mehmed Agha Mosque and Mehmed Agha Hamam (1585) in Istanbul.[1][9] At the time of Sinan's death, he was a senior official in the imperial department of architects and served as the Master of the Waterways,[8] the second-highest position in the department.[3]
He was likely commissioned to build the mausoleum of Sultan Murad III, located in the precinct of Hagia Sophia, when that sultan died in 1595.[21] He most likely designed the tomb but it was completed after his death by Dalgıç Ahmed Agha in 1599 or 1600.[22] Davud Agha was also responsible for beginning construction on the Yeni Valide Mosque in the Eminönü neighbourhood of Istanbul in 1597, on the orders of Safiye Sultan. The project was ultimately abandoned after his death and only completed later in 17th century by a different architect and patron.[23]
Style
Davud was Sinan's apprentice and followed the latter's teachings closely. His mosque designs tend to follow the octagonal baldaquin and hexagonal baldquin ideas that Sinan used in his late career.[1] Some scholars have characterized his works as conservative, citing the design of the Yeni Valide Mosque as an example because it follows the design of the Şehzade Mosque, a work from Sinan's early career.[3] Art historian Doğan Kuban, based on the assumption that the Nışançı Mehmed Pasha Mosque is his work, states that Davud was one of the few Ottoman architects after Sinan who displayed great potential and who went beyond his designs.[1]
Death and successors
Two different accounts of Davud's death are found in historical sources, one claiming that he died of the plague in September 1598 (1007 AH) and another claiming that he was executed at Vefa Square in 1599 (1008 AH).[2] He was succeeded as chief architect by Dalgıç Ahmed Agha,[24] who remained in the post until 1605 or 1606 and was in turn succeeded by Sedefkar Mehmed Agha.[25][24]